Introduction

Fedora has differing policies for each of its branches. This document describes for maintainers what sort of updates should be created in packages for each of the various branches of existing Fedora. In the event of questions or clarifications, please file a FESCo trac ticket or discuss on the devel list. In general, releases should go from less conservative (rawhide) to more so (the oldest supported stable release). This document attempts to describe when and what kinds of updates maintainers should push to Fedora users of its various branches. The Stable release updates vision from the Fedora Board includes more high level discussion and philosophy, while this
document is more a practical guide. Refer to Package update HOWTO for the technical steps on pushing the updates

Rawhide / devel / master

Rawhide is the always-rolling development tree. Package updates built for rawhide are composed every day and pushed out to all rawhide consumers. There are no "updates" or "updates-testing" repositories for rawhide. The Bodhi updates system is not used. New builds against this tree also are added to the build root (ie, other packages build from them) quite often.

Feel free to push out the newest version of packages as long as they do not cause breakage. Also keep in mind that the next Fedora release will be branched off rawhide a few months down the road. Therefore, it is best to only push development releases to rawhide if you are fairly confident that there will be a stable enough release in time for the next Fedora release. Otherwise you may have to back down to an older, stable version after the branching, which may involve epochs and other inconveniences.

Branched release

A branched release exists for part of the development cycle. It is branched off rawhide and eventually becomes the next stable release.
Branched releases do use the fedora updates system (bodhi). There are several "phases" that a branched release goes through that affect what updates can and should be done. In general maintainers should keep in mind that this tree is being used to stabilize for the next release, so changes should be careful and considered and heading toward stability. Builds in branched releases are NOT automatically added to the build root. You will need to request a buildroot override for needed packages.

Pre Beta

This is the time between the branch from rawhide and the Beta release of the new branched OS. During this time we are attempting to stabilize
the major versions of software that will be shipped with the final release of the OS. Major updates can be tolerated, but breaking things for early
testers should be avoided if possible. Additionally, as we get close to Alpha or Beta releases any change that breaks composes of Live media, install media or testing should be avoided. Packages for Features should be landing and getting major testing.

repos available: base updates-testing

During this time Maintainers MUST (enforced by bodhi):

Push all updates first to updates-testing.

All critical path updates MUST either get one +1 karma, OR spend at least 14 days in updates-testing and have no negative karma before being moved to stable.

All non critical path updates MUST either reach the prescribed karma level for that update, OR spend at least 3 days in updates-testing before being allowed to move to stable.

Beta to Pre Release

This is the time between the Beta release and the final release as stable of the branched OS. The branched OS should now be stabilized and prepared for release. Major changes should be avoided during this period.

repos available: base updates-testing

During this time maintainers MUST:

Avoid Major version updates, ABI breakage or API changes if at all possible.

Push updates first to updates-testing.

All critical path updates MUST either have a sum of +2 karma, OR spend at least 14 days in updates-testing and have no negative karma.

All non critical path updates MUST either reach the prescribed karma level for that update, OR spend at least 7 days in updates-testing before being allowed to go to stable.

Pre release

During this time the release is being composed and all non blocker changes should be avoided. In pre release period are non-blocker packages queued for so called zero day updates. These packages will be available in updates repository after whole distribution is released.

repos available: base updates updates-testing

All updates pulled into the release MUST fix a blocker.

Push updates first to updates-testing.

All critical path updates MUST either have a sum of +2 karma, OR spend at least 14 days in updates-testing and have no negative karma.

All non critical path updates MUST either reach the prescribed karma level for that update, OR spend at least 7 days in updates-testing before being allowed in stable.

Once, updates repo is available, stable updates will go there instead of to the base OS repo.

Stable Releases

Philosophy

Releases of the Fedora distribution are like releases of the individual packages that compose it. A major version number reflects a more-or-less stable set of features and functionality. As a result, we should avoid major updates of packages within a stable release. Updates should aim to fix bugs, and not introduce features, particularly when those features would materially affect the user or developer experience. The update rate for any given release should drop off over time, approaching zero near release end-of-life; since updates are primarily bugfixes, fewer and fewer should be needed over time.

This necessarily means that stable releases will not closely track the very latest upstream code for all packages. We have rawhide for that.

Rebases should be carefully considered with respect to their dependencies. A rebase that required (or provided) a new Python ABI, for example, would almost certainly not be allowed. ABI changes in general are very strongly discouraged, they force larger update sets on users and they make life difficult for third-party packagers. Additionally, updates that convert resources or configuration one way (ie, from older->newer) should be approached with extreme caution as there would be much less chance of backing out an update that did these things.

Whenever possible packagers should work with upstream to come up with stable branch releases or common patches for older releases, particularly when rebasing would require large dependency chain updates.

repos available: base updates updates-testing

Updates to 'critical path' packages

Updates that constitute a part of the 'critical path' package set (defined
below) including security updates must follow the rules as defined for critical path packages for
pending releases, meaning:

At the time of the request to stable, the update needs to have either a Bodhi karma sum of 2 OR

It must spend at least 14 days in updates-testing AND have no negative Bodhi karma points.

For the purposes of this policy, the 'critical path' package set is defined as the following:

Avoid Major version updates, ABI breakage or API changes if at all possible.

Avoid changing the user experience if at all possible.

Avoid updates that are trivial or don't affect any Fedora users.

Package maintainers SHOULD:

Push only major bug fixes and security fixes to release(n-1).

Exceptions

Some classes of software will not fit in these guidelines. If your package does not fit in one of the classes below, but you think it should be allowed to update more rapidly, propose a new exception class to FESCO and/or request an exception for your specific update case. Note that you should open this dialog _BEFORE_ you build or push updates. The following things would be considered in a exception request.

Things that would make it more likely to grant a request:

The package is a "leaf" node. Nothing depends on it or requires it.

The update fixes a security issue that would affect a large number of users.

The update doesn't change ABI/API and nothing needs to be rebuilt against the new version.

The update fixes serious bugs that many fedora users are encountering.

Things that would make it less likely to grant a request:

The update converts databases or resources one way to a new format.

The update requires admin intervention for the service to keep working (config file format changes, etc)

The update causes behavior changes (something that was denied is allowed, etc)

The update changes the UI the end user sees (moves menus or buttons around, changes option names on command line)

The update fixes bugs that no fedora user has reported nor would affect many fedora users (ie, fixes for other platforms or configurations).

Exceptions list

The following packages have been granted exceptions for the following reasons:

kernel package

Manpower of kernel maintainers prevents us from easily backporting all the bug fixes, security fixes and new hardware enablement we would need to to older, no longer supported kernels.

Additionally, multiple kernels can be installed/booted, allowing users to boot older kernels in the event newer ones fail to work, and allowing time for kernel maintainers to fix any critical bugs in new kernels on older stable releases.

KDE

Security fixes

If upstream does not provide security fixes for a particular release, and if backporting the fix would be impractical, then a package may be rebased onto a version that upstream supports. The definition of practicality is left to the judgment of FESCO and the packager.

Interoperability

If a package primarily serves to interoperate with hardware or network protocols, and the interface changes, then a package may be rebased if necessary. This includes network games, IM protocols, hardware music players, cell phones, etc. These packages may also be updated to add support for new devices or formats in compatible ways.

Database packages

Packages like virus scanners and spam filters typically have two components: a rules engine and a database. The database is expected to update frequently (sometimes not through the normal OS update mechanisms), but the rules engine is usually fairly static. However, if the maintained database changes to require a new version of the rules engine, then the package may be a candidate for rebasing.

Examples

Mozilla releases Firefox 4.0.1 with a security fix. Fedora 12 is shipping with 3.0.7, and though the bug is also present there, the fix in 4.0.1 does not apply because that part of the browser has been completely rewritten. Rebasing to 4.0.1 would be allowed since this is a security fix.

automake releases a new version that changes some warning conditions to errors. This would break the build process for existing packages, and would not be allowed.

AOL changes their instant messenger protocol in a way that requires an update to libpurple. The only upstream version of libpurple that supports the new protocol is an ABI break relative to the version in the current Fedora release. Rebasing would be allowed since this is an interoperability requirement.

Abiword releases a new version that adds compatibility with WordStar 4.0 documents. It also completely updates the user interface to use pie menus. This would be a feature enhancement with a major user experience change, and would not be allowed.

WebKit requires an update to solve a security problem. This requires updating Midori to a version with some minor menu layout changes. This would be a judgement call based on how intrusive the changes are (removing the File menu would be rude, but moving the plugin configuration menu item would be acceptable).

Firefox releases an update that only contains changes for other platforms. This update could be pushed to rawhide (just to keep up with the latest version), but should not be pushed to stable releases, as it does no good to our users and wastes resources to build, update, mirror and download to our users.

Terminal fails to build from source when tested in a mass rebuild. An updated package should be pushed to rawhide. Fixes for stable releases should be tested and even commited, but unless there is a problem with the previous existing build in the stable release, no update should be issued. This update would not change any user facing functions of the package.

KDE upstream releases a new major version, and at the same time stops supporting the older release that is in Fedora N and Fedora N-1. This release includes a large number of bugfixes, mixed with enhancements and security fixes. An exception for this type of update would need to consider: ability to backport major fixes/security issues, type and amount of bugs fixed, ability to not update other parts of fedora for this update (ie, avoid qt or other base library ABI changes), amount of testing and end user visible changes. An exception like this would be on a case by case bases based on all the above.

Problems or issues with Updates

In an effort to learn from any mistakes made, in the event of a update causing a widespread or serious problem for Fedora users, please file a FESCo trac ticket. FESCo will discuss and try and work to prevent the issue from happening again. A past record of such issues can be found at Updates Lessons.

FESCo will work with QA and others to prevent or mitigate the issue.

AutoQA

Note that once AutoQA is ready, it will be enabled whenever possible. This guide will be modified to add AutoQA in when it's ready.

AutoQA Acceptance tests for all updates

This section is not yet enabled in production

All updates, including security updates, must pass acceptance criteria before being pushed.